| It’s not just parenting—at least half of the responses to posts about anything here are attacking and blaming the OP for being the problem. Or accusing them of being a troll. |
| I know exactly what you mean OP. I have two kids, one easy, as you describe. I learned that he is what is considered a compliant child, which is what most children are. They still tantrum and have their moments, but at their core, they want to please and comply. Then there is my other kid. I have read many books and he fits the strong willed personality type. I think maybe 10% of people are strong willed? Everything I thought I knew about parenting went out the window. People who don't have a strong willed child just cannot understand. It's like parenting on another plane. |
| OP is totally right. I learned this lesson very early on with twins. I did everything the same (same bath, same food, same temp, same pjs, same room, etc.) and one would be sleeping and one would…not. It was them, not me. I’m glad to have been humbled by knowing this. It has made me less smug and more empathetic toward lots of kids and other families. I only wish the parents of easy, neurotypical children would somehow realize this and have more patience and empathy for me/us. I promise I’ve worked much much harder than many parents only to have a suboptimal, sometimes humiliating results. |
| Human nature: People want to attribute success to the decisions they made and blame problems on things beyond their control. |
Yes, having my second child was a very humbling experience. |
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Parenting is hard even if you have an easy kid. So they can't even imagine how much harder it would be with a difficult kid. Because they parent their easy kid and they're still tired and stressed out and figure that's what YOU mean when you say you're tired and stressed out.
They don't realize what we go through just for the bare minimum. |
And yeah, second child problems here with an older kid who coasts through life. |
What were the signs? |
| Maybe you had too many kids and not meeting that child's needs. |
Troll |
There is also this idea that you need to control a child. You don’t need to control a child. You need to learn how that child operates, so that they can learn what they need to do to interact well with others. This takes lots of time and attention, and can be hard if you have multiple kids and not a lot of outside, experienced help. |
+1. I felt so great about my oldest being so smart and chill. Figured I was doing something right. And now I feel like crap because of how hard I struggle with the little one, and all of her testing, and therapies, and school meetings, and charts, and skipping events and travel. I know logically it's not my fault but society definitely makes me feel that way. |
Very hyperactive in the younger years but then it transitioned to daydream/spaciness, forgetting things, difficulty initiating a task or finishing one. |
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I think you have some good points but it’s not as black and white as you are implying. Yes, every parent is trying their best, but some strategies are just not as effective and every parent has blind spots. I would absolutely rather be alerted to my blind spot than continue to struggle. So, I could turn your same question around and say, why are some parents so insecure and defensive that they assume that feedback is an attack on their parenting?
The best athletes in the world have multiple coaches and specialists who critique their performance every day. Authors have editors. Etc. Nobody is nailing it just through sheer effort, we all benefit from a feedback loop. I don’t think the ugliness or mean tones are justified but I also don’t believe that every single kid who acts out is simply hopeless and just a harder kid. I’ve seen parents in real life who unknowingly cause or worsen their kids issues, despite the best of intentions! |
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OP - I feel your post very much. I have one easy and one difficult child. I make lots of mistakes with my difficult child so the MONA perfect moms are not wrong that my parenting contributes. But they have no idea how hard it is to be her parent. It’s easy to be a perfect parent to my other child.
My difficult child though is so super smart, such a strong advocate, observant and insightful about everything. Nothing gets by this child. Someday she will be killing it. |